David Stockman and the Bush Tax Cuts
My Letter to the Editor submitted to the Columbus Dispatch on Dec. 28th. I got a confirmation call back request which is a good sign that it will be published. Then I backed off a little and resubmitted with one change, inserting Congress in the place of Republican in the last paragraph. It was slightly too partisan and did not reflect the reality that many of these changes will be supported by Republicans, pushed by the Tea Baggers, and supported by conservative Democrats. I should have left it alone and not submitted the change, because it was not published. In any case, it is here to be read by all who visit My View.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR COLUMBUS DISPATCH Published Jan. 2011
I am troubled by the tax bill negotiated by President Obama and the Republicans and the threat it portends for the national debt and the ability of government to play a critical role in promoting the well being of our nation. Thankfully my former Republican Congressman, David Stockman, affirms the discontent I am feeling. Stockman was my Congressman in 1979 when I lived in southwest Michigan. Following the 1980 election he was appointed Director of the Office of Management and Budget in the Reagan Administration.
The architect of the Reagan tax cuts is highly critical of the Bush tax cuts, arguing that we are in such serious financial straits with the exploding national debt that they are bankrupting the nation. Stockman says that it was an illusion to think that the Bush tax cuts would pay for themselves. Giving tax cuts, he says, has become a mantra for Republicans, thus destroying the last vestiges of a party that was traditionally in favor of sound money and fiscal restraint. The fiscal situation is so threatening,“it is…unseemly for the Senate minority leader, Mitch McConnell, to insist that the nation’s wealthiest taxpayers be spared even a three-percentage-point rate increase.” (NYT Stockman Op-ed 07/31/10)
While this legislative compromise to extend the full Bush tax cuts may sustain the economic growth now underway, it will also add an additional 900 billion dollars to the deficit. It contributes to the highest level of US economic inequality since records have been kept. It will become the basis for Republicans to push for cuts in programs and services that benefit the least well off in our society whose numbers are growing.
Ward Cornett III

